Willem Breuker

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Ouverture 00:00 Tools
Intermezzo Between Nothing 00:00 Tools
Prelude I 00:00 Tools
Prelude II 00:00 Tools
Suffering 00:00 Tools
Suicide Song 00:00 Tools
Block Chorus 00:00 Tools
In Memory Of John Coltrane 00:00 Tools
Collision Stomp 00:00 Tools
Thanksgiving Aria 00:00 Tools
Music for John Tchicai 00:00 Tools
Telephone Song 00:00 Tools
Trauermusik 00:00 Tools
Continuous C Sharp 00:00 Tools
Final 00:00 Tools
Ominous 00:00 Tools
Talking 00:00 Tools
Before Og 15 Kir II 00:00 Tools
Psalm 1964 00:00 Tools
De Spaanse Vlieg 00:00 Tools
Anabelle 00:00 Tools
Parabasis 00:00 Tools
Lethe 00:00 Tools
Orge 00:00 Tools
Busride 1 00:00 Tools
Cross 00:00 Tools
Felix Meritis and B.V. 00:00 Tools
Piece for Three Barrelorgans 00:00 Tools
Als De Zachte Bleke Zomer 00:00 Tools
Poenduet 00:00 Tools
Icp 1 for Maarten Derksen 00:00 Tools
Valse de la Bourgeoisie 00:00 Tools
Postlude for Three Barrelorgans 00:00 Tools
Ziek Van De Zon 00:00 Tools
Mijn Hart Is Troebel 00:00 Tools
My baby has gone to the schouwburg 00:00 Tools
Ik Begin Een Nieuw Leven 00:00 Tools
Slotkoraal 00:00 Tools
Tango I 00:00 Tools
Singin the Impalpable Blues 00:00 Tools
Bewitched 00:00 Tools
Gamut 00:00 Tools
Tango II 00:00 Tools
Muziek voor Johnny Meyer 00:00 Tools
Wij 00:00 Tools
Condizione Niente 00:00 Tools
Let's Fall In Love 00:00 Tools
Pas heb ik nog een meisje ontmoet 00:00 Tools
Wake Up 00:00 Tools
Ichtyosaurus 00:00 Tools
Strangling 00:00 Tools
Lied van het verdronken meisje 00:00 Tools
Summer Music 00:00 Tools
Tango superior 00:00 Tools
Queen's Day 00:00 Tools
Piece for Two Barrelorgans 00:00 Tools
Institution 00:00 Tools
Mr. M.A.De R.In A 00:00 Tools
Hawa-Hawa 00:00 Tools
Threat 1 00:00 Tools
Besame 00:00 Tools
On Animal Locomotion 00:00 Tools
Muziek voor Reinbert 00:00 Tools
Guckkasten 00:00 Tools
Party Night 00:00 Tools
oog om oog, tand om tand, overture 00:00 Tools
De Illusionist 00:00 Tools
Photograph 00:00 Tools
Jantje Zag Eens Pruimen Hangen 00:00 Tools
Gamelan 00:00 Tools
commune 00:00 Tools
Fidget 00:00 Tools
maagdenhuis 1969 00:00 Tools
minimal kollektief dance 00:00 Tools
Hawa - Hawa 00:00 Tools
Duke Edward / Misere 00:00 Tools
Steaming 00:00 Tools
Conjuror 00:00 Tools
dolle dinsdag 00:00 Tools
Wij Zullen Doorgaan 00:00 Tools
Zondags 00:00 Tools
Evelyn Roe I - Heeft een meisje blanke dijen - Evelyn Roe II 00:00 Tools
Sorrow 1 00:00 Tools
Rascals 00:00 Tools
Beauty 00:00 Tools
Piece For Two Street Organs 00:00 Tools
Overture 00:00 Tools
Piece For Three Street Organs 00:00 Tools
Music For Han Bennink 00:00 Tools
A House In The Country And A Girl On The Side 00:00 Tools
Somebody Has A Plan 00:00 Tools
Churchy I 00:00 Tools
De Onderste Steen - Aftitelmuziek 00:00 Tools
serendipity 00:00 Tools
No Pasaran 00:00 Tools
no illusions 00:00 Tools
De Ziekte van Parkinson - Troosteloos 00:00 Tools
Taibe Duet 00:00 Tools
Dream 00:00 Tools
Postlude For Three Street Organs 00:00 Tools
jordaan waltz 00:00 Tools
flower power revolution 00:00 Tools
Ouverture - Het Koraal van Baal 00:00 Tools
Melodia-Grebbelied 00:00 Tools
Zonnig Madeira 00:00 Tools
Het Arbeidsbureau 00:00 Tools
Flute from the Andes 00:00 Tools
twenty minutes in the life of bill moons 00:00 Tools
Two Men in White Coats 00:00 Tools
November 00:00 Tools
Epilog 00:00 Tools
Drums in the night - I - Ouverture 00:00 Tools
II - La valse de la bourgeoisie 00:00 Tools
Sorrow 2 00:00 Tools
Threat 2 00:00 Tools
De Ziekte van Parkinson - Nightclub 00:00 Tools
De Onderste Steen - Titelmuziek 00:00 Tools
Waddenzee Suite 00:00 Tools
De Ziekte van Parkinson - Tango Parkinson 00:00 Tools
Churchy Ii 00:00 Tools
Evelien Roe 00:00 Tools
Monk in Groningen 00:00 Tools
Vliegen 00:00 Tools
To Europe 00:00 Tools
Tango 2 From Woyzeck 00:00 Tools
Riette 00:00 Tools
soekarno-blues (1999) 00:00 Tools
De Achterlijke Klokkenmaker 00:00 Tools
Oog om oog, tand om tand 00:00 Tools
De droite (la contre-revolution) 00:00 Tools
BERCEUSE FOR AN UNWANTED CHILD 00:00 Tools
The Mines of Morococha 00:00 Tools
HAN DE VRIES 00:00 Tools
Waddenzee Suite/Suite for the Shallows 00:00 Tools
For You - Woman - Spanish Song 00:00 Tools
De Illusionist (OST Иллюзионист / De illusionist реж. Й.Стеллинг 1984) 00:00 Tools
Twice a Woman 00:00 Tools
Verbroedering Uit Kain En Abel 00:00 Tools
Keitz Klacht 00:00 Tools
Hier Hieronymus 00:00 Tools
Ase's Death 00:00 Tools
III - Spartakus 00:00 Tools
Psalm 00:00 Tools
The Spanish Whore Overture 00:00 Tools
The Hole in the Ground 00:00 Tools
De Ziekte van Parkinson - Gemankeerde Finale 00:00 Tools
Imaginary Symphony Of The Air 00:00 Tools
Dat is toch mogelijk, niet waar? 00:00 Tools
Tango 1 From Woyzeck 00:00 Tools
Preperation to Voting 00:00 Tools
Busride 2 - the Accident 00:00 Tools
Pilgrimage 00:00 Tools
Psalm121 Shir Lamaalot 00:00 Tools
The Way South 00:00 Tools
Ouverture / Het Koraal van Baal 00:00 Tools
The P.L.O. March 00:00 Tools
FOR GREETJE BIJMA 00:00 Tools
NEW PILLARS IN THE FIELD OF ART 00:00 Tools
The Indominable 00:00 Tools
Execution 00:00 Tools
Carillonstuk 3 00:00 Tools
IV - Augusta: les seigneurs en cols blancs 00:00 Tools
A Little Older 00:00 Tools
É Pericoloso Sporgersi: De busrit 00:00 Tools
V - L'irresolution de Kragler 00:00 Tools
The Long Haul From Wolkbreuk 00:00 Tools
Nightmare 00:00 Tools
VI - De gauche (la revolution) 00:00 Tools
Haydn Concerto For Trumpet And Orchestra (3rd Movement) 00:00 Tools
Circus Kneel 00:00 Tools
Expert Vivaldi Op. 156 00:00 Tools
Reisefieber 00:00 Tools
Duke Edward - Misere 00:00 Tools
Flat Jungle 00:00 Tools
Tlam (bass clarinet solo) 00:00 Tools
Suzuki Violinenlied 00:00 Tools
De Oost, Indonesian Liberation Struggle 1947 00:00 Tools
Rit Over Het Bodenmeer Ballade 00:00 Tools
To Be With Louis P. 00:00 Tools
Busride 1 (De Illusionist) 00:00 Tools
Preparation To Voting 00:00 Tools
Ouverture "La Plagiata" 00:00 Tools
Telefoon 2 [Adella] 00:00 Tools
Tango: Jantje Zag Eens Pruimen Hangen 00:00 Tools
Ouverture Het Koraal van Baal 00:00 Tools
GUTS: De moeizame klimtocht 00:00 Tools
GUTS: De snelle daling 00:00 Tools
GUTS: Het hoge tochtige hok 00:00 Tools
Rhapsody in Blue 00:00 Tools
Mr M.A. de R. in A. 00:00 Tools
PLO-Marsch 00:00 Tools
Trauermusik Aus "Keetje Tippel" 00:00 Tools
Szenenwechsel-Musik Aus "La Plagiata" 00:00 Tools
Luiermuziek 00:00 Tools
the long haul from "wolkbreuk" 00:00 Tools
Ouverture 'De Vuyle Wasch' 00:00 Tools
Sur L'autoroute 00:00 Tools
Nietzsche Aan Te Doen 00:00 Tools
Invasie muziek Bob + Babe 00:00 Tools
PASTICHE 00:00 Tools
Psalm 122, I Was Glad When They Said to Me 00:00 Tools
Anna 00:00 Tools
PASTICHE 00:00 Tools
Entering Lima 00:00 Tools
É Pericoloso Sporgersi: Valse de la bourgeoisie 00:00 Tools
Lied Van Het Verdrunk Meisje 00:00 Tools
Ichothaurus 00:00 Tools
Cross/Piece for Two Barrelorgans 00:00 Tools
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Dutch saxophonist, clarinetist, composer and bandleader Willem Breuker is probably the single most well known, prolific, and influential figure in 20th century Dutch music. From his early, free jazz days to his role as long-time leader of the successful Willem Breuker Kollektief, he accomplished much in creative music from the 1960s on. In addition to performing, Breuker helped instigate changes in government subsidies for jazz and improvised music, he co-founded two important independent, Dutch labels -- ICP and BVHaast -- and he unabashedly mixed genres and incorporated humor and theater into his compositions, with a love of experimentation and a definite dedication to music. On November 4, 1944, Willem Breuker was born into the final (and bare bones) winter of WWII and grew up in a middle-class home in Amsterdam East. He recalls a childhood filled with sound and music: loud neighbors, the yelling fish merchant, a marching band that rehearsed nearby, a barrel organist -- all of these would leave their mark on the young boy. He first heard jazz around the age of 10, when he heard Dutch alto saxophonist Piet Noordijk (with whom Breuker would later play) over the radio. Breuker began taking music lessons around this time, studying singing, and, eventually, the clarinet. Even then, Breuker enjoyed improvising, and it wouldn't be very long before he wanted to play his own music. From early on, Breuker was listening not only to jazz such as Count Basie, but also modern classical including Bela Bartok, Charles Ives and Schoenberg. In fact, Breuker has told of being interested in just about every kind of music he heard, except for rock & roll. He had the opportunity to learn another instrument, the bass clarinet, by joining a group which already owned one but needed a clarinetist. Breuker was eventually kicked out of the band rather publicly and had to relinquish the bass clarinet after a T.V. appearance by the band at the Loosdrecht jazz festival. The same musicians that took back the instrument would play in Breuker-led events many years later. After being denied admission to Amsterdam's conservatory, Willem Breuker began attending night school, with plans of becoming a teacher. But before he got his degree, Breuker was working professionally as a musician. Breuker was quickly more interested in playing originals as opposed to jazz standards, and so, he began composing in the early '60s. Around this time, he also performed at jazz competitions, sometimes winning prizes and, sometimes, causing quite a scandal. One of the best-known incidents involved Breuker covering some well-known songs penned by one of the festival organizers. He originally planned on including the songwriter in the performance, but the two did not get along and, in the end, Breuker played them horribly, on a plastic flute with his own, made-up words -- much to the amusement of the audience and the horror of the judges. It was during these competitions that Breuker was first heard by band leader Theo Loevendie and pianist Misha Mengelberg. Breuker was invited to join Mengelberg's quartet, but the new quintet line-up only lasted a few gigs before the two more traditional players, bassist Rob Langereis and saxophonist Piet Noordijk, left the band. Bassist Maarten Altena joined on for awhile but left after the quartet's 1967 festival appearances, leaving Mengelberg's band a trio. Meanwhile, Breuker and Bennink also had a duo project going, the New Acoustic Swing Duo, and released their first duo recording (this self-titled album was reissued in 1984) on their own label, ICP (Instant Composers Pool). Mengelberg became the third equal member of ICP and their label name quickly became an umbrella for a wide variety of line-ups. It wasn't too long before these groups included either Breuker or Mengelberg but not both, as the two musicians had clashing opinions on approaches to live performance, what ICP should be, and many other musical issues. Breuker wanted tunes and rehearsals; Mengelberg wanted instant composing. Breuker wanted more people admitted who would have equal voting rights; Mengelberg wanted the core three members to have final say. Both also had different takes on music theater, which all three got involved in during the late '60s. And so, both led their own gigs (although Mengelberg played markedly less often), with Bennink (who didn't choose sides) performing with both leaders, although more often with Mengelberg. Mengelberg and Breuker didn't record together after January, 1969 until a recording session led by German pianist Alexander von Schlippenbach 20 years later! But Breuker did a lot more during these pre-Kollektief years, as well. He improvised with drummer Pierre Courbois (who, Breuker claims, was the first to play 'free' in Holland) who then introduced him to German musician Gunter Hampel. In 1966, Breuker composed a piece that addressed that summer's tumultuous political scene entitled "Litany for the 14th of June, 1966," which won second place at Loosdrecht, and earned recognition for Breuker as one of the first in Holland to incorporate national politics into music. This composition was performed a couple more times before being recorded in September, 1966 for Breuker's debut album, Contemporary Jazz for Holland/Litany for the 14th of June 1966. The first side of this album features a 17-piece band that included bassist (previously a guitarist) Arjen Gorter and Breuker's reeds teacher Ab van der Molen, while the second side is performed by a quintet including Mengelberg. That same month, Breuker performed on Boy Edgar's album, Finch Eye, and a few months later, in December, he performed on Hampel's date for ESP, Assemblage/New Music from Europe, and again with Hampel in Alexander von Schlippenbach's first Globe Unity Orchestra, which also included saxophonist Peter Brotzmann at the time. Breuker, incidentally, would perform and record in Gunter Hampel's groups well into the '70s and during one of these dates (July, 1969), would meet and perform with American reedsman Anthony Braxton. Breuker led a trio with Bennink and Altena (essentially, Mengelberg's quartet without Mengelberg) and performed in a trio with Brotzmann and Bennink in 1968. Breuker and Bennink were also part of Peter Brotzmann's landmark May, 1968 recording, the still-shocking Machine Gun, on which Breuker played tenor sax and bass clarinet. Throughout this time, he led occasional performances for radio and continued composing, including scores for film and theatre. Some of the jazz musicians Breuker collaborated with, including Bennink, were less interested in repeat performances (rather necessary to theater) leading Breuker to work with more classical musicians during the late '60s. The more open-minded classical musicians were also necessary for some of his other compositional experiments, such as live performances using a timetable (that called for specific composers' works at specific times) instead of a score. He also toyed with a variety of instrumentations, as attested to by his works for 19 mandolins, a group including bagpipe, and his Lunch Concert for Three Barrel Organs (ICP 003). A 2-LP set referred to as "the chocolate box" (due to its packaging) that documented some of Breuker's work from 1968-70 was released on the ICP label, followed by The Message (ICP 009), written for a 1971, three-act 'opera' by a mime troupe. The early '70s brought Breuker's official split with ICP and early the following year, he was recording his Willem Breuker Orchestra. The Willem Breuker Kollektief took shape a couple of years later. In 1970, Breuker and a few other musicians attended a meeting of the SJIN, the Dutch Jazz Foundation, an organization which received government funding for an orchestra and an annual prize, but not much else. The SJIN board was surprised to learn that these musicians wanted to make a living at performing jazz full-time and wanted SJIN to plan accordingly. The unforeseen result was that much of the board resigned, leaving it in the musicians' hands. With the help of the remaining board members, the musicians wrote a proposal for a government jazz subsidy, which was accepted first by the city of Amsterdam and a year later by the national Ministry of Culture. Breuker was among the first musicians to receive the new stipend that began in the mid-'70s. In 1974, Breuker and trombonist Willem van Manen went before Amsterdam's arts council to request a place for the jazz musicians and improvisers to rehearse and perform in. This council was also surprised, and initially against the idea, but ultimately relented and promised some money. Breuker and a few others fronted money (until the check arrived) for the building that came to be called BIMHuis. They also spent the entire annual budget on just a few months' worth of programming. The city did pay what it had promised, soon followed by support from the Dutch government, and the next year brought a more reasonable increase in funding. The BIMHuis has since become an historic venue for creative music; a unique and unlikely space that still featured challenging and intriguing music decades later. Through his work in various groups, Breuker met pianist Leo Cuypers and the two musicians hit it off immediately. They formed a for-hire composing team, founded and co-owned the BVHaast label (until a falling-out in 1980, after which it became Breuker's label) and recorded two duo albums -- the first, 1974's Live in Shaffy, was released on their label, while Superstars came out on the German FMP (Free Music Production) label in 1978. BVHaast would document Breuker's various film and theatre music over the years as well as the music of his Kollektief. The Willem Breuker Kollektief, usually about 10 people large, formed in 1974 and included many musicians that had collaborated with Breuker during his ICP days. WBK recorded their first album, and Breuker's first internationally distributed release, The European Scene (MPS Records), at a 1975 music festival and went on their first (and successful) North American tour two years later, giving Americans their first taste of Dutch jazz. WBK staged often-theatrical shows from the beginning and became known not only for their music, but for their entertaining and humorous performances. Over the decades, the group's line-up inevitably changed, but by the start of the next millenium, the Willem Breuker Kollektief still included original members bassist Arjen Gorter and trumpeter Boy Raaymakers. In 25 years of performing around the world and at countless festivals, WBK recorded over 30 albums, mostly for BVHaast, and released several CD compilations of their work including The Parrot and Celebrating 25 Years on the Road, a two disc set and book that is a photographic retrospective of the band's performances. Having broken with free jazz by the time WBK was formed, Breuker moved even further from his beginnings by incorporating an increasing amount of other composers' works into WBK's repertoire. Over the years, the Kollektief has recorded tributes to (or, takes on) George Gershwin, Kurt Weill, Ferde Grofe, Ennio Morricone, and more. In recognition of Breuker's outstanding contributions to Dutch music, he was awarded the Dutch National Jazz Prize in 1970, the Jazz Prize of the West German Music Critics in 1976, received many commissions from the government (including Amsterdam's Musica '85 event, for which Breuker assembled a parade of 1500 musicians and dancers) and was given the opportunity to create a permanent work of art in the town square of Middelburg, The Netherlands in 1998. For this, Breuker placed a recording and score of his Hunger suite beneath a man-hole cover engraved with "Time Is An Empty Bottle Of Wine / Willem Breuker / 1998." Read more on Last.fm. 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